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Homophobia
continues to hamper HIV efforts globally
Craig McClure, International AIDS Society
April 29, 2008
http://www.msmandhiv.org/whatsnew/news.html
The International
AIDS Society (IAS) today expressed its deep concern about continuing
inflammatory and homophobic statements by political leaders in Uganda,
Poland, and most recently by the President of The Gambia, and urged
national and international leaders to reject homophobia and to take
affirmative steps to reduce its impact on HIV.
One of the many lessons
learned in the IAS' more than 20 years of leadership in HIV/AIDS,
is that well-designed and appropriately targeted programs, implemented
with the support of public health and political leadership, can
effectively reduce HIV transmission in communities most at risk
for HIV, including gay men and other men who have sex with men (MSM).
A report issued at the
end of 2007, led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School
of Public Health in the US, provides solid evidence that HIV among
MSM continues to be widespread, and in many cases, is exacerbated
by stigma, criminalization and the lack of appropriate services.
The study indicates that, even in countries with low HIV prevalence
in the general population, the epidemic among MSM is raging.
According to UNAIDS,
fewer than one in 20 MSM around the world has access to HIV prevention,
treatment, and care - and even fewer in low-income settings.
Compared to the HIV testing rates of 63-85 percent seen among MSM
in Australia, Europe, and North America, rates among MSM in much
of Africa, Asia, and Eastern Europe are often under 20 percent.
As it has been demonstrated
in many different countries, reducing the social exclusion of gay
and MSM communities through the promotion and protection of their
human rights (including sexual rights and the right to health) is
not only consistent with, but a prerequisite to, good public health.
Once discriminatory policies are abolished and stigma and discrimination
are confronted, country-based programs can be put in place to encourage
gay men and MSM to stay free of HIV-infection, thus supporting national
goals of reducing HIV burden.
However, efforts to replicate
these successful strategies in more countries are hampered by recent
homophobic statements made by political leaders from Uganda, Poland
and The Gambia. Comments from these leaders, and other politicians
who call for the arrest, detention, and even killing of homosexuals,
are reprehensible.
In 2008, despite the
accumulation of more than a quarter of a century of knowledge of
successful HIV interventions, homophobia and the criminalization
of homosexuality continue to be significant obstacles to the scale
up HIV prevention, treatment, care and support. Though countries
such as Cape Verde and South Africa have repealed their sodomy laws,
and government officials in Kenya, Malawi, and Mauritius have begun
discussions about the harmfulness of such laws, a resurgence of
intolerance and homophobia, coupled with lack of action to repeal
laws that violate the human rights of same sex practicing men and
women, is posing a grave threat to the AIDS response in many countries.
Despite its much heralded
success in promoting a public health response to HIV, Uganda continues
to cling to a colonial-era sodomy law that punishes homosexual conduct
with life imprisonment. And, Uganda is by no means the exception.
Worldwide, more than 85 countries criminalize consensual homosexual
conduct. Such laws give governments a pretext to invade people's
private lives and deny them essential human rights: to live in peace
and in health.
The XVII International
AIDS Conference, to be held in Mexico City from 3-8 August 2008,
will highlight successful work with MSM in several Latin American
countries. The experience from Latin America, as well as from other
parts of the world, can provide invaluable guidance to leaders from
other middle- and low-income countries in Africa, Asia and Eastern
Europe.
The very high proportion
of MSM in Latin America who, over the past 25 years, became infected
with HIV, developed AIDS and later died can only be described as
catastrophic. But, in the past decade, in a growing number of countries
throughout the region, there have been positive responses that continue
to serve as shining examples to the rest of the world. If national
and world leaders are serious about curbing the epidemic, programmes
that bridge across sexual orientation, that protect public health,
and transform stereotypes and prejudices must be a first line priority.
"Homophobia
- whether propagated by government leaders, enforced by outdated
laws, or perpetuated through stigma and discrimination - continues
to fuel this epidemic, and should therefore be the number one enemy
of those who are serious about ending this global tragedy,"
said Dr. Pedro Cahn, IAS President, AIDS 2008 Co-Chair and President
of Fundación Huésped in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
*With an international membership of more than 10,000, the International
AIDS Society is the world's leading independent association of HIV
professionals.
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